The majority of the series revolves around the central mystery that develops when, in the first episode, a local homecoming queen turns up dead, prompting an FBI investigation headed by one Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan), paragon of virtue and kindness, and lover of black coffee and cherry pie ("This must be where pies go when they die."). Paired up with local sheriff Harry S. Truman (Michael Ontkean) - you have to check out the donut spreads they get at their local department - Agent Cooper takes to the wild charms of Twin Peaks quickly, endearing the town to the show's audience in the process. But as the layers of the mystery begin to peel back, what at first looks like the tragic slaying of an innocent becomes more complicated, as it's discovered that Laura Palmer was no vestal virgin, and may have been courting the darkness. And beneath Twin Peaks' quaint, small town charm lies a seedy underbelly of drug trafficking and prostitution. But it doesn't end there; vague references to some kind of ancient evil in the woods initiate a slow-burning plot involving supernatural forces.
There's a sort of evil out there.
Something very, very strange in these old woods.
In the meantime, we are introduced to each of the town's inhabitants, as the show explores their increasingly crisscrossing lives, and the investigation into Laura Palmer's death plays out. Many great actors appear, chiefly recognizable (to me) among them including both Grace Zabriskie and Warren Frost (who played Susan's parents on Seinfeld), as well as Don Davis in a role not completely unrelated to his short-term appearance on The X-Files as Scully's father. Even David Duchovny shows up in a few episodes towards the latter part of the series, as a cross-dressing DEA agent. But I'd just as soon link you to the show's full cast list as recollect all of the great actors and performances (Ray Wise' climax as Leland is one of the highlights) that turn up on the show.
The owls are not what they seem.
It's easy to become invested in each of the characters' various struggles - Laura's classmates' amateur investigations into her death, and their myriad love troubles; the local business maven's attempt to buy out the town's log mill - and, barring that, resort to manipulating criminal elements in order to get his way; as well as the town's more and less petty criminals' agendas. Running through it all is the mystery of who among these people was Laura's killer. And when the case is finally closed, the show does an effective job of keeping the viewer invested in what follows, to the point that when the final, not entirely conclusive episode (the most mind-bending television finale I've seen since I watched Neon Genesis Evangelion) finishes, you're still left wanting to know, what happens next?
Fire walk with me.
You get the sense that Twin Peaks is a "spectacle show" - that people hear about it, and watch it just to see for themselves how weird it is. But the truth is, it's very good TV in its own right. It's easily the most accessible of David Lynch's projects that I've seen. There are times when the show approaches soap operatic drama, and even effectively executes humor, but its best moments are those that remind you that you are watching a horror series. And the moments that make it stand out among all other shows - including those that were influenced by it, and those that are compared to it - are those inimitably Lynchian flashes of surreality. Nothing else I've watched is quite like Twin Peaks, and it holds up remarkably well, considering its age. I recommend it to anyone who enjoys horror, drama, or just good, classic TV with talented writers, directors, and actors.
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